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Progress Check Meetings

You can find an introduction to Progress Check Meetings in Chapter 18 of Where the Action Is.
These resources will help you plan, run, and troubleshoot the specific Progress Check Meetings your team needs.

Definition

A Progress Check Meeting is used to confirm progress on a project or initiative and to maintain project momentum.

Questions Answered

Since our last progress meeting: What’s been done?

What still needs doing? What’s changed?

What do we need to focus on next?

Examples

The Project Status Meeting

The Client Check-In

The Sprint Demo

Purpose

Maintain project momentum.

Ensure mutual accountability.

Work Outcomes

Clarity about work progress.

Information about circumstances impacting the planned work.

Visibility into significant victories or setbacks.

Decisions on how to address potential changes to the project plan.

Documented decisions and action items.

Human Outcomes

Reassurance about the project.

Renewed project momentum.

Meeting Agenda Templates and Guides

Elise Keith - How to Run a Weekly Update Meeting
Inspired by the written report format put together by the fine folks at Weekdone, this meeting agenda template adapts the PPP status report into a status meeting where people can discuss the information they share.
Used by product teams, technology companies, and entrepreneurs... [ more ]

Elise Keith - How to Run a Project Status Meeting
This meeting agenda template follows a standard format common in organizations with a well-developed Project Management Office.
Most commonly scheduled as a weekly or bi-monthly meeting, this format is best suited for those managing cross-functional teams on moderately complex... [ more ]

Lucid Blog Posts

Elise Keith (2019). At Lucid Meetings, our mission is to make it easy for teams to run successful meetings every day. Teaching teams the skills they need to run successful meetings seems like an obvious way for us to fulfill this mission, which is why we've now opened our first courses to students. We opened Meeting School now because, after over a decade of research and work with high-performing organizations, we know what works.

Elise Keith (2016). A team’s regularly scheduled meetings should maintain work momentum and strengthen the relationships between team members. The frequency of these regular meetings sets the team’s work cadence.

Tricia Harris (2016). Return found that clients wanted to rush through meetings. The problem is that when organizations try to shortcut their meetings, they lose the fundamental cadence that confirms commitments and drives accountability.

Tricia Harris (2015). There is no reason that our team shouldn’t be prepared for a meeting. It really takes a moment’s glance to see what’s on the agenda, and it takes a few seconds to add something. Being well organized for a meeting = more productivity.

Glossary of Meeting Terms

General Term

A meeting cadence is a pattern of regular team meetings. Short, frequent meetings increase a team's work momentum. Groups that provide oversight, such as boards and committees, hold longer meetings less frequently.

Technique

RAID stands for Risks, Assumptions, Issues, and Dependencies. Teams may conduct a RAID analysis as part of their project planning meeting, then produce a RAID board which they can review, update, and revisit during...

A weather report is a way to run meeting check-ins and check-outs developed by Diana Larsen for teams who meet on weekly basis.
During the check-in, each person gives their weather report for the previous week’s...